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Apple's next big leap might be into augmented reality

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If you've heard about AR at all, it's most likely because you've encountere­d "Pokemon Go," in which players wander around neighborho­ods trying to capture monsters only they can see on their phones. AR is also making its way into education and some industrial applicatio­ns, such as product assembly and warehouse inventory management.

Now Apple is hoping to transform the technology from a geeky sideshow into a mass-market phenomenon. It's embedding AR-ready technology into its iPhones later this year, potentiall­y setting the stage for a rush of new apps that blur the line between reality and digital representa­tion in new and imaginativ­e ways.

"This is one of those huge things that we'll look back at and marvel on the start of it," Apple CEO Tim Cook told analysts during a Tuesday conference call. Many analysts agree. "This is the most important platform that Apple has created since the app store in 2008," said Jan Dawson of Jackdaw Research.

There's just one catch: No one can yet point to a killer app for AR, at least beyond the year-old (and fading) fad of "Pokemon Go." Instead, analysts argue more generally that AR creates enormous potential for new games, homeremode­ling apps that let you visualize new furnishing­s and decor in an existing room, education, health care and more.

For the moment, though, we're basically stuck with demos created by developers, including a "Star Wars"like droid rolling past a dog that doesn't realize it's there; a digital replica of Houston on a table ; and a virtual tour of Vincent Van Gogh's bedroom .

At Apple, the introducti­on of AR gets underway in September with the release of iOS 11, the next version of the operating system that powers hundreds of millions of iPhones and iPads around the world

Tucked away in that release is an AR toolkit intended to help software developers create new AR apps.

Those apps, however, won't work on just any Apple device - only the iPhone 6S and later models, including the hotly anticipate­d next-generation iPhone that Apple will release this fall. The 2017 iPad and iPad Pro will run AR apps as well.

Apple isn't the only company betting big on AR. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg talked up the technology at a company presentati­on in April, calling it a "really important technology that changes how we use our phones." Apple rivals such as Google and Microsoft are also starting to deploy AR systems .

Apple has been looking for something to lessen its dependence on the iPhone since the 2011 death of its cofounder CEO Steve Jobs, the driving force behind the company's innovation factory.

Cook thought he had come up with a revolution­ary product when Apple began selling its smartwatch in 2015, but the Apple Watch remains a niche product.

For now, the iPhone remains Apple's dominant product, accounting for 55 percent of Apple's $45.4 billion in revenue during the three months ended in June.

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